Total mess! Last shop really screwed up on this '07 Acura MDX. What does the CAR WIZARD find?

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  • Опубликовано: 18 фев 2023
  • Customer just bought this '07 Acura MDX only to find that the last repair done at another shop was done totally wrong. What does the CAR WIZARD 🧙‍♂️ find and what options does the customer have now?
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Комментарии • 629

  • @jeffzekas
    @jeffzekas Год назад +497

    “Not spend the next six months in Court” - Exactly, we gave a bad review to a local mechanic, and instead of addressing the problem, he threatened to take it to court, called us liars, threatened to take other, Less than legal actions, this is what you have to expect from dishonest or incompetent shops

    • @s99614
      @s99614 Год назад +31

      Complain online anonymously.

    • @jeffzekas
      @jeffzekas Год назад +51

      @@s99614 That might work in a big city, but here in a small town, especially when given the details of the incident, he knew exactly who wrote it

    • @diverdave4056
      @diverdave4056 Год назад +23

      my local Honda shop is both Dishonest and Incompetent !

    • @stansmith4054
      @stansmith4054 Год назад +27

      Let him take you to court. He will lose!! It is merely an opinion of yours. Free speech man!

    • @bsgarey
      @bsgarey Год назад +8

      @@diverdave4056 Honda shops in this area i hear constant complaints about. I took my Honda to a private shop.

  • @doggedlydetermined7022
    @doggedlydetermined7022 Год назад +126

    Wild to think this generation goes all the way back to 2007. I remember these coming out like it was yesterday.

    • @mrbond9882
      @mrbond9882 Год назад +19

      2012 they switched the headlights and taillights a bit but it's still the same thing lol

    • @doggedlydetermined7022
      @doggedlydetermined7022 Год назад +5

      @@mrbond9882yes just a mid cycle refresh but still the same generation.

    • @doggedlydetermined7022
      @doggedlydetermined7022 Год назад +1

      @@mrbond9882yes just a mid cycle refresh but still the same generation.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Год назад +8

      Yep, I was driving these into the lot off the truck brand new... I hated the 07 refresh with the "bird beak" grille.
      But they are great cars.

    • @JPR3D
      @JPR3D Год назад +3

      I still think 1997 was 10 years ago.

  • @Fishsticks187
    @Fishsticks187 Год назад +18

    It says a lot about the times we live in that people are buying daily drivers with over 200,000 miles on them with the intention to fix them. Before the car market went crazy, that was the kind of vehicle you bought from a neighbor for 500 bucks and ran into the ground. At least it's less wasteful I guess.

  • @jimmywalters3071
    @jimmywalters3071 Год назад +33

    I drove my 2004 Acura MDX (bought new in June 04) till 330,000 miles and sold it to a family member in 2017 .. she still has it and it's approaching 400,000 miles. Same engine 3.5 and runs great. ... I loved the MDX , drove it for 13 years with little problems.

    • @jd646
      @jd646 3 месяца назад +1

      How often did you adjust the valves??

    • @jimmywalters3071
      @jimmywalters3071 3 месяца назад +2

      @@jd646 I never recalled having that service done. I replace plugs.

  • @myblujl7503
    @myblujl7503 Год назад +206

    I had a shop really mess up my car once. They would not fix anything they broke, and I took it to another shop. Without telling the new shop anything they said "wow. Whoever worked on this really messed up!" and I said "Can I have that in writing?" and they were like "Nope. Not going to touch a lawsuit". They would fix it (on my dime) but would not make any sort of statement of the findings. I understand that they didnt want to get involved, but this is literally protecting bad mechanics.

    • @dunebasher1971
      @dunebasher1971 Год назад +31

      If the second shop *had* got involved and the first shop decided to sue for defamation, it would be down to the second shop to prove that the first shop had been responsible. That's how defamation law works; it's not up to the first shop to prove their innocence, it would be up the second shop to prove the first shop's guilt. And yes, it can and does protect the guilty, especially if the guilty has the deepest pockets.

    • @lukewalker1051
      @lukewalker1051 Год назад +17

      Doctors do the same thing and its human health in the balance, not whether a car runs properly. Nobody wants liability in a litigious society.

    • @mplslawnguy3389
      @mplslawnguy3389 Год назад +12

      Prime example of why it's worth it to learn how to work on cars yourself. At the very least, arm yourself with the knowledge, so when you do take it to a shop, you have a better idea of what kind of shop they are and whether or not a repair is necessary or not.

    • @goodday126
      @goodday126 Год назад

      Everything you described is caused by the system of liberal democracy adopted in the U.S. during the 1930's. The law sides with wrongdoers. Hopefully you found some random insurance solution to cover it, because fixing them the old fashioned way will land you in prison. It's called progress.

    • @mplslawnguy3389
      @mplslawnguy3389 Год назад

      @@goodday126 "Fixing them the old fashioned way will land you in prison." What do you mean by that and what do you mean by "them"? Also, what exactly will land you in prison?

  • @hunkajunkaautomotive9870
    @hunkajunkaautomotive9870 Год назад +40

    I can only imagine the number of techs at the edge of their seats wondering if it was them, lol

    • @johngaither9263
      @johngaither9263 Год назад +3

      How many could there be in the Wichita, Newton, Ks area and how many of them are not already under Tyler Hoovers video wing?

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable Год назад

      Could have been a temp hire by the shop, or some trainee. Sometimes you get people who seem OK, but after a while their sloppy ways come back to haunt the shop owner.
      You can't look over everyone's shoulder 24/7.

  • @JoeBidenIsAClown
    @JoeBidenIsAClown Год назад +59

    These aged really well and look modern even to today’s standards. They’re all around great vehicles and have seen some with 200 plus K miles

    • @jfkusa123
      @jfkusa123 Год назад +7

      230,000 on mine no major issues

    • @StevenLastname
      @StevenLastname Год назад +3

      Acuras in general are usually pretty good. 228k miles on my 03 TL and still going strong! The most expensive fix I've had on it was replacing the timing belt, pully tensioner, and water pump.

    • @AWMJoeyjoejoe
      @AWMJoeyjoejoe Год назад +4

      ​@@StevenLastnameThat's not a fix, that's just maintenance.

    • @strawberryw.3950
      @strawberryw.3950 Год назад

      160k on my 09 MDX. Hoping for 250k.

    • @groovymoon
      @groovymoon 9 месяцев назад +1

      125K on my 2012 TSX Wagon. Had to replace the half shafts at 62K. The starter makes a grinding noise every few starts when disengaging from the ring gear. The switch for the passenger front over head map light broke and had to be fixed. Every once and a while the rear window wiper behaves strangely, moves really slow, doesn't return to home position when switched off. Nice driving car, engine ruins good and trans shifts smooth and I am going to keep it till the wheels fall off but... not entirely impressed.

  • @robinroberts6373
    @robinroberts6373 Год назад +71

    I used to work in aircraft maintenance (avionics). Intermittent issues are by far the worst to troubleshoot. Good job running this down!

    • @mplslawnguy3389
      @mplslawnguy3389 Год назад +1

      I was an AT in the Navy. Didn't particularly like the job. Troubleshooting was a bitch sometimes.

    • @StevenLastname
      @StevenLastname Год назад +3

      I work in IT and have to troubleshoot intermittent issues rather frequently (especially for VoIP problems). Yeah, they're the worst without a doubt!

  • @Drewbmw07
    @Drewbmw07 Год назад +30

    The 07-09 mdx are super reliable. Those earlier j37 are a beast if the maintenance is kept up. 230k on the original drivetrain still going strong.

  • @michaelstrongbow2336
    @michaelstrongbow2336 Год назад +14

    I got a used RL with the 3.7L and I knew the previous owner ditched the car when all the timing components needed to be replaced. The dealer I bought the car from gave me a phone number to a mechanic they use. I called the guy after doing my own research on the 3.7L. I told him it needed a timing belt kit installed. He argued with me that that Honda motor has a timing chain, argued with me. After I was able to get off the phone with him, I called the local Acura shop and had the timing belt service done right by ppl trained specifically in Honda/Acura cars.

  • @BryanW916
    @BryanW916 Год назад +65

    8:18 You really are a wizard! I have a '09 Acura TL SH-AWD with the 3.7 and i had the low oil warning pop up on the nav screen many times while driving. This definitely is a common problem with the oil pressure sending unit. I replaced it with the updated part number sending unit and the warning has never came back. Also, you are 100% right on the transfer case. Everyone i know with either a Honda/Acura AWD never services it! I do my transmission drain and fill, transfer case, rear diff service every 20k miles. I always love watching your videos. Been here since you first started producing them when Hoovie was recording with an iphone on a tripod.

    • @shafferjoe1962
      @shafferjoe1962 Год назад +8

      Question, why are you replacing those fluids every 20K miles? Most of the fluids you are replacing have 50K miles life time or more. I'm not calling you out, just wondering why, because these fluids will live so much longer.

    • @homesold
      @homesold Год назад +8

      @@shafferjoe1962 Probably because of that V6 Acura/Honda infamous transaxle limited lifespan, lol! With no serviceable filter, I don’t know that they ever lived this one down…that is unless you drive it annoyingly gentle

    • @shafferjoe1962
      @shafferjoe1962 Год назад +1

      @@homesold I don't know anything about these SUV. But with that said, that would make since. Thank you

    • @gabevillarreal96
      @gabevillarreal96 Год назад +9

      ​@@shafferjoe1962 Probably for peace of mind. Fluids are cheap... transmissions engines and transfer cases are not👍🏼

    • @BryanW916
      @BryanW916 Год назад +8

      ​@@shafferjoe1962 Because the manual states: "Driving in mountainous areas results in higher level of mechanical (sheer) stress to fluid. This requires differential fluid changes more frequently than recommended by the maintenance minder. If you regularly drive your vehicle under these conditions, have the differential fluid changed at 7,500 miles , then every 15,000 miles." i drive my car pretty aggressively when im on my favorite winding mountain road fairly often. i forgot about the transfer case maintenance interval but i know it's roughly around the same mileage. Honda/Acura has been known for their weak auto transmissions so i just do all 3 every 4 oil changes. All of the fluid is cheap, a new trans, rear diff, or transfer case isn't.

  • @philroder4878
    @philroder4878 Год назад +8

    in 1974 My first job out of college was Regional Manager for SUBARU. Just getting starting in those days. My dealer in Huntsville Alabama was also a Citroen repair shop. I was fascinated by the cars especially the DS. He told me you had to be part mechanic and part plumber to work on these. Can't wait to see your Citroen episode.

  • @mattmayo3539
    @mattmayo3539 Год назад +11

    My mom bought one of these back in 2010. The seller worked worked at google here in the Bay Area. Google maintained the car. It was a company car serviced at the dealership. Mom still drives it and loves it. 200k miles and runs like a champ.

  • @tyeeslayer
    @tyeeslayer Год назад +20

    He's the WIZ and nobody beats him!!

  • @rbkahuna8192
    @rbkahuna8192 Год назад +20

    I had this local shop I had a great relationship with, always had done good work and generally quick. We took in a Camry for a timing belt and it came back leaking oil. We took the car back and all of a sudden they were rude as hell. They finally agreed to fix their screw-up and it came back leaking again and that was that. Any shop can make a mistake but owning it and making it right is what keeps customers.

    • @marlu6373
      @marlu6373 Год назад

      it leaked because they did not do the seals.rush.

  • @fuse8052
    @fuse8052 Год назад +5

    What you found is why I take my time and double check my own work. I will not do anything that can ever come back on me. We have very high integrity at my current shop

  • @fortunatedad7695
    @fortunatedad7695 Год назад +34

    As soon as I saw what warning indicators came up, I knew it was the Rocker arm actuator.
    A couple years ago I ran some marvel mystery oil in my 2010 mdx to see if it would help the oil consumption issue I had, which wasn't terrible at the time. After I did the oil change after the MMO, when accelerating full throttle I had those same warning lights and a p 2648 code. I changed the actuator and the screen filter, haven't had an issue since. Also significantly fixed the oil consumption, I rarely need to add oil now.
    I LOVE my MDX! 250,000km and going great! It even endured the abuse of being a leased car previously.

    • @marcusdamberger
      @marcusdamberger Год назад +3

      So these have a timing belt? At least that's what it sounded like from the Wizard.. I recently found out the Honda Pilot also has a timing belt, I was considering that vehicle when my girlified was looking for a new auto. But there were no local ones available in her price range, now I'm sorta glad didn't end up with one. But the MDX was another one I was looking at, but again nothing in the price range, this was when car's were at their peak, have come down some since then. However, why did Honda use timing belt's all the way into the mid 2000s? My old 98' Honda Accord 2 door (6th gen) had a timing belt, made sure I replaced it at 100k and 200k before it finally died at 265k. 7th Gen Accord 4 cylinder finally got timing chain, but it seems all V6 Hondas/Acura's always have a timing belt?

    • @fortunatedad7695
      @fortunatedad7695 Год назад +2

      @marcusdamberger5175 Yes, they have belts. From what I was told it is because they run quieter.
      My buddy is a honda tech and he said unless they are starting to getting noisy, they can be changed every 150,000km. When we did mine after 120,000km it had no cracks and could have gone longer. The reason why I changed it was because the tensioner was leaking and just swapped since I had it all open anyways.

    • @jamesfederer5592
      @jamesfederer5592 Год назад +3

      No need to change the whole unit. Just replace the control valve and oil pressure sensor.

    • @Matt_from_Florida
      @Matt_from_Florida Год назад +1

      ​@@jamesfederer5592 Yeah I don't get it (what The Wizard said). The solenoid assembly by itself is Acura part 36171-RYE-A01 ($51.36). The Wiz said they only sold the entire Variable Valve Timing-Valve Assembly, Acura part 15811-RYE-A01 ($162.36). Prices from ACURAPARTSWAREHOUSE.

    • @robertshaw7289
      @robertshaw7289 Год назад

      ​@@marcusdamberger i

  • @thomasfarley6052
    @thomasfarley6052 Год назад +10

    Thank you Wizard definitely a good video on how these kinds of problems manifest and why it is hard to diagnose. Looking forward to the next video they have become a fix i need to make thru the week.

  • @DONCHILLS
    @DONCHILLS Год назад +43

    Great video yet again. Very professional and informative. Great job Wizard.

    • @lutomson3496
      @lutomson3496 Год назад

      except he never checked the upper and lower control arm bushings nor ball joints fingers dont do crap..

  • @jimsmalleimb7709
    @jimsmalleimb7709 Год назад

    Your explanation of the pre-purchase inspection expectations at the end was illuminating. Thank you.

  • @godzillanola
    @godzillanola Год назад +2

    One of the best SUVs I've ever owned was the MDX. Loved it

  • @bobbyknox4881
    @bobbyknox4881 Год назад

    David, love your channel, and the fact you always do the tight thing. Also ,I enjoy Mrs Wizard's commentary. Just purchased a beautiful, well serviced 2014 MDX. Out of n abundance of caution I had the timing belt,tensioner,water pump,and sparkplugs replaced. After one week all kinds of codes started being set And the vehicle had a misfire code. I called the shop who never returned my call. I got a towing service to take my vehicle to a trusted shop 50 miles away. He fixed the misfire in about two hours when he detrrmined the other dhop had not correctly replaced the connector on the fuel injector controller. He checked and made sure none of the pins were bent and sprayed the connectors with silicone, erased the codes now it runs as it should. Haste makes waste and now I will never use that shop again. Thank you for your channel!

  • @seanm2511
    @seanm2511 Год назад +4

    I like the Car Wizard. And I enjoy the debug process used on this channel. Work is not done prior to knowing what is being done or why. The "shotgun" approach aka the theory of "replace everything to run up the bill" is not used.

  • @jimharrington7532
    @jimharrington7532 Год назад +6

    Always enjoy and appreciate your honesty Weeeeeeeeeeeeezard. You have helped so many of us viewers out. Acura is a great vehicle and will last and last, unlike junkRovers. You are amazing

  • @bbodinejr
    @bbodinejr Год назад +15

    Have had three of these MDX’s from new to 200k miles. All bulletproof engines; transmissions and torque converters not so much….

    • @s40volvoguy
      @s40volvoguy Год назад

      Nothing wrong with the torque converters. Regular fluid changes and a software update fix all converter issues.

    • @dariodjakovic1600
      @dariodjakovic1600 Год назад

      You are talking 2003-2006 mdx transmission old body style

  • @jstanovic
    @jstanovic Год назад

    Wizard...pointing out how some shops screw up jobs is a breath of fresh air! I have experienced it more than once. A shop broke the tabs on a plastic cover on a Passat that I owned. I only found that months later!

  • @md2k8
    @md2k8 Год назад +3

    The first-generation and the second-generation of the Acura MDX will hopefully be on one of the six used vehicles that you should not buy list, as well as the Mazda CX-7 with the 2.3 L turbocharged four-cylinder engine and the early model years of the first-generation, 2002 and 2003 Saturn VUE with the 3 L V6 engine. The second-generation, Mitsubishi Outlander with the 3 L V6 engine and the first-generation and the second-generation of the Mazda CX-5 will not be on the do not buy list, because they are currently great vehicles to buy. Thank you very much and have a great week ahead.

  • @hatchetdog
    @hatchetdog Год назад +1

    I have 2007 MDX technology package it has 157,000 mi on it right now and it has never skipped a beat one of the best cars I've ever had

  • @hamiltonasseiro6671
    @hamiltonasseiro6671 Год назад

    Love your videos. You are such a good communicator to your audience. Thank you.

  • @JavierCR25
    @JavierCR25 Год назад

    I don’t know why but watching these videos just relaxes me so much. The Wizard is so didactical when it comes to explaining.

  • @mattbrown5511
    @mattbrown5511 Год назад +4

    I hope the customer can get financially set and get that car fixed properly. There are many going through tough times, and it is only going to get worse.

  • @cobydog456
    @cobydog456 Год назад +1

    That's funny. I was just looking through you're channel yesterday because I was curious if you've ever reviewed one of these 2nd gen MDX's and I wake up today and find this!

  • @TheNismo777
    @TheNismo777 Год назад +5

    Nice catch at the end :D

  • @matthewwilliams3575
    @matthewwilliams3575 Год назад +2

    The undercarriage on that mdx is clean! I’ve got a 2013rdx with 124k and most of the undercarriage is spotless as well! Honda makes a great vehicle!

  • @thebigguy8306
    @thebigguy8306 Год назад

    Thank you, Wizard and Mrs. Have been to dealerships and private shops for crapy service. Hard to find a good mechanic you can trust.

  • @afellowinnewengland6142
    @afellowinnewengland6142 Год назад +9

    As a retired technician who took great pride in his work I want to tell this “Wizard” that a pre-purchase inspection is not a “cursory glance.” I took a minimum of 1 to 1.5 hrs to pull plugs, inspect gear and trans fluids, run system scans, test calipers, run the vehicle on the lift and look for anything suspicious. An experienced Honda specialist would have caught that (but not a generalist).
    Also, if I knew the shop that did the work I’d probably give them a friendly call and try to explain what I found. If they care about their work and it wasn’t done too long ago they’ll make it right.

    • @danieln.285
      @danieln.285 Год назад +2

      I’m a shade tree mechanic and I agree with what you said. Yeah it won’t be quick, but it’ll be thorough enough to tell you the overall condition of the car, so for example, if you pull the transmission drain plug out for just a brief moment and dark fluid comes out, then you know it probably was never serviced. Or with the spark plugs - if you pull them out and they look really black, then the engine could be burning oil or running real rich. It’s good to know the deeper details of the cars, and for a bit more time, it’ll pay off.

    • @archangel3237
      @archangel3237 Год назад +2

      Thats what they do, they just don't go back through the entire inspection on video, just a few of the problems they found and the specific problem for the video. No one would watch if it was 2 hours long.

    • @afellowinnewengland6142
      @afellowinnewengland6142 Год назад

      @@archangel3237 We weren't referencing the content/video- it was the comment he made during the video. I suspect you didn't watch the whole thing carefully.

  • @rposton919
    @rposton919 Год назад +2

    Reminds me of some boat motor work in the past. Guys would show up with a multi-cylinder outboard that wouldn't start. " I already did the carburetors so they right." Nine times out of ten those 'right' carburetors were the problem.

  • @philbrutsche8928
    @philbrutsche8928 Год назад +4

    @10:17 nearly everyone neglects the transfer case/power transfer unit fluid, on everything. It's not specific to Honda/Acura cars, trucks and SUVs.

    • @Steverz32
      @Steverz32 Год назад +1

      That was the 1st thing I had done while they were doing my timing belt on my 2005 Lexus rx330. Who knows when the all wheel drive system was serviced last🤷🏽‍♂️ 203K on the clock and still runs like a champ! 👍

  • @31dknight
    @31dknight Год назад +2

    Another great video from the wizard. Keep it up

  • @brandonbogart7195
    @brandonbogart7195 Год назад +3

    Mother's Mag & Aluminum polish will clean those frosty/foggy headlights in a couple minutes. Wax on wax off. Some come out as if you replaced the headlights. Others 50-75 more clarity.

  • @Daemonarch2k6
    @Daemonarch2k6 Год назад

    Omg, this beautiful car wizard and his beard of gold is making the world literally better every day. Thanks!

  • @chrismayer3919
    @chrismayer3919 Год назад

    My Akkie TSX was wiped out in a high speed highway crash. My Integra type R was put to death in a multi-car pileup. I really miss both those cars; they both saved my life.

  • @johnlarkin549
    @johnlarkin549 Год назад +2

    Hey wizard your improving not overly repetitive with your descriptions, or Mrs Wizard has edited well👍

  • @EyeMWing
    @EyeMWing Год назад +5

    You technically can service (most) staked U-joints. In the vast majority of circumstances, if you actually do remove the staked joint, there is a surface suitable for a snap ring joint.
    Of course, this isn't something you really want to be doing as a business while you can still get replacement driveshaft assemblies, but as they become unavailable, it's a another option on the table instead of going to a custom driveshaft and new transmission/diff yokes.

  • @Grunt49
    @Grunt49 Год назад

    True Wizardry! Love your channel.

  • @scottimusgarrett15
    @scottimusgarrett15 Год назад

    The tension! The suspense! How will it all end?! Leaving the diagnosis for the middle!
    Not too bad for the amount of miles on it. The previous owner must have had it serviced regularly. Thanks, Mr. and Mrs. Wizard! ✌️❤️🙂

  • @rl2905
    @rl2905 7 месяцев назад

    Did my own timing belt/water pump on my 09 MDX about a year ago and it's still running great! My 2nd timing belt job I've done, and my first on a V6. It was fun! It's scary turning the engine on though when you're done.

  • @luismarty1685
    @luismarty1685 Год назад

    Thank you, Car Wizard.

  • @seanthomas2906
    @seanthomas2906 Год назад

    If I was in the good old US of A. I'd work for ya. Knowledge is cool. Thanks for all your time

  • @rustyrobinson8027
    @rustyrobinson8027 Год назад +3

    Thanks wizard

  • @hyruleworrier3021
    @hyruleworrier3021 Год назад

    I have a 2009 w 114k miles on it. Was getting a Check Emissions alert, which tripped the Check SH-AWD System & Brake System. Pulled two codes that were related to Bank1 Sensor. Had Acura replace it today, drives fine now. Just had to spend 3k in repairs (resealing oil pump, rebooting inner cvs, O2 sensor) but these are literally the only repairs I’ve ever had done. These suvs are tanks!

  • @boggsty
    @boggsty Год назад +2

    Sunday video? Hell yeah!

  • @dicoypowell3908
    @dicoypowell3908 Год назад +1

    Love the intro wizard. My vtech ain’t kicking in bro. Absolutely funny. I’m still laughing

  • @kellingtonlink956
    @kellingtonlink956 Год назад +10

    A least he was lucky enough, or smart enough, to get this MDX into the Car Wizard’s Lair. Thanks for the video.

  • @juanr2789
    @juanr2789 Год назад

    Thanks for the information very helpful 👍

  • @xipxip3784
    @xipxip3784 Год назад +27

    I wouldn’t have guessed that much mileage, car is in good shape.

    • @InternetDude
      @InternetDude Год назад +4

      Yeah, because Honda quality.

    • @trainwreckthomas_
      @trainwreckthomas_ Год назад +2

      @@geogmz8277 I drove a GMC Sierra 2008 wit a 5.3 for 423k till it gave out was a beast for the usual GM family of cars

    • @mplslawnguy3389
      @mplslawnguy3389 Год назад +5

      @@geogmz8277 It's a 200K mile car. I would be pretty happy with that purchase. Those problems aren't the end of the world. That's what you get with a 200K mile vehicle, you're going to have to fix stuff.

    • @waterloo123100
      @waterloo123100 Год назад +1

      @@trainwreckthomas_ That’s because it’s a 5.3 those traverse/ equinox’s are completely trash

  • @christianheidt5733
    @christianheidt5733 Год назад

    Nice find wizard!
    Sad it was incompetence, but at least u found the issue!!!

  • @SilverScarletSpider
    @SilverScarletSpider Год назад +3

    that 2007 Acura MDX is honestly kinda beautiful (headlights aside)

  • @CarlosValdez-nu4gn
    @CarlosValdez-nu4gn Год назад +7

    Finally a video on a car I own except it’s a 2010 with oil consumption due to clogged piston rings 😔

    • @malikfickling149
      @malikfickling149 Год назад +2

      Typical for honda engines to burn oil they all do

    • @mtnman1984
      @mtnman1984 Год назад +2

      @Malik Fickling I must be an outlier. 2013 Crosstour, 125K-ish miles, keeps it's oil level between services. I did disable VCM when I got it at 37K miles. The vibration drove me up the wall and then I read about the lawsuits. Such a stupid piece of technology.

    • @malikfickling149
      @malikfickling149 Год назад +5

      @@mtnman1984 cylinder deactivation is one of the worst ideas ever and the small increase in mpg is not even worth the extra engine wear from turning off cylinders

    • @mtnman1984
      @mtnman1984 Год назад +3

      @Malik Fickling at least it's a simple process to deactivate in the Hondas. I run the system once per service period to cycle the solenoids a few times, but it's otherwise inactive. Probably one of the best things I did proactively for the car's longevity.

    • @BryanW916
      @BryanW916 Год назад +4

      @@mtnman1984 If you deactivate the VCM like you have, that stops the oil burning issues in the 3.5. Those engines are very reliable. The 3.7 is the only J series engine with oil burning due to the piston design.

  • @sulmanhafeez3148
    @sulmanhafeez3148 Год назад

    @11:20 in Houston , very rear and hard to find shops able to service the U joint. Not many shops like to take liabilities that’s why everyone tells you that buy the whole drive shaft.
    I had honda CRV 98 back in a days, was able to service it.
    I bought the u joints from Canada and went to local shop and they replaced it. My Honda crv Drive shaft is non serviceable in American but once you break open then you should be able install replace UJoint.

  • @dillonkoch72
    @dillonkoch72 Год назад +1

    I got my girlfriend a 2010 MDX Oct of 2020 we still have it 40,000 miles later and it's nothing but maintenance. The only thing outside of maintenance was a ac compressor. It's coming up on 170,000. Oil change every 5k miles and transmission drain and fill every 30k miles. I haven't touched transfercase or differentials. K&N air and cabin filters.

  • @Virtualhangover999
    @Virtualhangover999 Год назад +1

    You’re a hell of a great guy wizard!!

  • @Jmdp.94
    @Jmdp.94 Год назад +1

    I like how wise the Car Wizard is by effectively staying out of any legal troubles, backlash and any unwanted feuds because he simply leaves the other shops anonymous.

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable Год назад

      It's common sense, plus he has no way of really knowing if it was the other shop. Gotta be careful when accusing someone of something.

  • @the.otis.burger617
    @the.otis.burger617 Год назад +1

    You know, I can honestly say that I don't blame the customer for not wanting to do the full repair at this time. With the price of "everything" rising steeply over the past couple of years, you gotta take care of home/family FIRST in most cases and just live with whatever car problems you have until you can scrape up enough money to cover the repair cost(s).
    I just had an issue with my '05 Highlander where she started slowly leaking power steering fluid at this past summer. I started saving up for repairs after asking my mechanic the cost of the "worst case scenario" some time around November. Fast forward to a few weeks ago when I finally was able to put the car in the shop, had the problem fully diagnosed (second-to worst case scenario; it just needed a new pump and hoses not a full rack replacement), and I was comfortable paying the cost of the repairs because I prepared for it.
    OH, and yes...that MDX is still a great looking SUV and I'd TOTALLY buy one if I were in the market for a new vehicle.

  • @stickit2theman1
    @stickit2theman1 Год назад +2

    I know the feeling with intermittent issues, my 03 Bravada gives me a service AWD light maybe once or twice a month and it turns off when the engine shuts off. Only parallel I can draw is it happens more often when it's raining so it could be a wiring issue but otherwise I'm completely clueless...

  • @isaac24
    @isaac24 Год назад +2

    I don't know if anyone else noticed, but the 2 tires on the left of the car are Hankook Dynapros, and the back one that the Car Wizard looked at was a Firestone Destination. Just something interesting to note.

  • @obsoleteprofessor2034
    @obsoleteprofessor2034 Год назад

    Plastic wood trim and Corinthian leather headliner.. marvelous!

  • @lakeforkwiring
    @lakeforkwiring Год назад +3

    I've owned 2 MDX cars and pretty sure they did not make the 3.5 for 07 year model Wizard only the 300 hp VTEC. 275 K miles on my 07 still runs and drives great ... Original trans and motor.

  • @corey4109
    @corey4109 Год назад +3

    If the customer doesn't wanna dump a bunch of money into it just tell them to get the Sylvania headlight restorer kit. Only takes maybe 20 to 30 minutes each side and works a treat.

    • @gabevillarreal96
      @gabevillarreal96 Год назад +2

      The Cerakote one is much better and pretty cheap on Amazon.

  • @nicolaeandronic3661
    @nicolaeandronic3661 Год назад

    Great vid as usual! It might have a different rear-right tire ?

  • @gdubya83
    @gdubya83 Год назад +1

    When the Gmc z71 All Terrain first came out my friend's truck lost almost all the power after the warranty expired. His friends had the same kind of truck and that one had oil consumption issues and both trucks were bought new

    • @CRAPO2011
      @CRAPO2011 Год назад

      If v8 prolly cause by displacemnt on demand

  • @ferdinand9103
    @ferdinand9103 Год назад +2

    Little note you may have missed, while it's not the end of the world, that 1 tire you checked is mismatched from the rest of them. The 3 hankooks are looking to be getting a little low on tread. Its not the greatest for an AWD system but it should survive.

  • @bradhaughton6698
    @bradhaughton6698 Год назад

    I'm glad I found a shop in my area that found me a used engine for my car that has a two-year warranty after owning the car for a year with the original going bad at 190,212 miles after buying the car at 180,000 miles. It was $8,000+ to replace the engine including some of the accessories, now it's leaking it's just one of the accessories that was not the right part and now the control arm is cracked and the cv joint is leaking after driving for 4 hours to get my new tires.

  • @iboswell
    @iboswell Год назад +1

    Without knowing that engine I'd ask the question what would happen if the timing tensioner was released just a little such that the cable could be pulled back around the end of it so no longer under tension.
    Just added a reply from CW to another comment - makes sense although good luck to the customer... "And ruin the chances for warranty work for the customer? The other shop could claim that I broke it by moving the wire."

  • @troy510
    @troy510 Год назад

    Yeah the intermittent issues like this are the worst to track down. It took me months to figure out I had a bad fuel pressure regulator because the pressure was perfect every time I would test it. Then the truck would run perfect most of the time then bog down out of nowhere and run like crap the rest of the day and throw 02 sensor codes. Everyone kept saying "Replace the 02 sensors" I finally figured out the fuel pressure regulator was just getting stuck shut sometimes, And the 02's were doing what they were supposed to, Lol it was so simple but if you don't have experience with that stuff it's not so easy to figure out. That was really smart checking where the last shop worked on the Acura. I don't know how he even noticed that wire lol. Definitely a wizard!

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable Год назад

      Probably just looked around the S-belt, knowing there were sensors there, or perhaps just looking at the oil level problem and noticed it.
      Not uncommon for wires to get damaged by pulleys or caught in the belt and ground intermittently if they are not secured properly.

  • @samholdsworth420
    @samholdsworth420 Год назад +1

    Let's get started

  • @taelorwatson9822
    @taelorwatson9822 Год назад +1

    I work with a girl that had a 2004. It has the nav screen, DVD player, felt so ahead of its time.

  • @SergioLambo777
    @SergioLambo777 Год назад +3

    i had a same generation mdx 2011 that was in limp mode aswell and it was the o2 sensor that was bad.

  • @AcuraAddicted
    @AcuraAddicted Год назад +3

    Looks like it's time to reseal the oil pump (and the pan, of course, as you can't do one without the other). It's a shame, because you need to take the TB off for this, which means it should have been done alone with the TB. Ah, well.

  • @michaelwillis2436
    @michaelwillis2436 Год назад +27

    That shiny aluminum Timing belt tensioner usually comes from dayco, gates or Continental. Very high failure rate in my experience. We only use OE Honda or Aisin as they usually go the whole 100k interval versus 20 to 30 k

    • @mongo64071
      @mongo64071 Год назад +1

      I had mine done at Honda dealer with presumably OEM parts. Didn’t last 65k miles.

    • @homesold
      @homesold Год назад +1

      Yeah well, if you can’t even count on it going 30k mi, it isn’t even worth doing *or worst case, trashing your engine (when a good belt lasts 150k)

    • @homesold
      @homesold Год назад +1

      @@mongo64071 Could it have been the labor then? *It won’t even necessarily last 1-day if the workmanship is crappy. Parts mean a lot, but they’re not everything

    • @mongo64071
      @mongo64071 Год назад +2

      @@homesold well I ca t see that was labor. It worked from 100k to 165k. 7 years ago. The dealer certainly would not stand behind their work.

    • @2URLex
      @2URLex Год назад +1

      Aisin for the win.

  • @jynxclover2996
    @jynxclover2996 Год назад +1

    Can't wait to see the Citroën. Love the videos, wizard.

  • @E90_335xi
    @E90_335xi Год назад +11

    When I used to work at Acura like 4 years ago I used to do timing belts on those mdx’s in 20 mins flat. About an 1 hour if I was doing the oil pump seals and timing belt cover seals.

    • @CRAPO2011
      @CRAPO2011 Год назад

      You were a pro watched my mechanic do it on my J35A4 and it was about 5-7 hours. One of the water pump bolts were stripped.

    • @GeraldPUR
      @GeraldPUR Год назад

      Real pro uff sounds like a mess to deal with

    • @onodagreat
      @onodagreat Год назад

      What state are you in

  • @goodday126
    @goodday126 Год назад +1

    On my son's 11' Escape the transfer case is also notoriously crammed right up against the exhaust like this, and also Ford insists that it's a lifetime fill. No. It is actually a 30k mile item on that vehicle. Fortunately my son's transfer case was not smoked when we bought it, so changed it with a top quality fluid, and will be doing it on short intervals. It's not difficult or expensive.

  • @walkerholmes4426
    @walkerholmes4426 Год назад +9

    I have a 2008 mdx with 165,000 and it’s the most reliable car I have owned. The key fob could be more durable but after 15 years I guess it’s been through a lot😂 and for the nay sayers your probably didn’t maintain the vehicle

    • @user-tb7rn1il3q
      @user-tb7rn1il3q Год назад +2

      You must be lucky. The MDX, Pilot, and Odyssey are the most common broken down vehicles on the interstate shoulders.

    • @midwestfarm757
      @midwestfarm757 Год назад +5

      @@user-tb7rn1il3q Never seen that in Iowa/Minnesota/Wisconsin. I see a lot of GM and Fords broken down though.

    • @robmalcolm8042
      @robmalcolm8042 Год назад +2

      @@user-tb7rn1il3q the MDX does suck we had a 03 and with 140,000 miles and barely a few months it was one of the worst owned vehicles ever

    • @CRAPO2011
      @CRAPO2011 Год назад +1

      The part of my fob that holds the key ring just broke on my way older 02 odyssey. Annoying haha

  • @edwardgreenjr167
    @edwardgreenjr167 Год назад +1

    That and the P2646 error on the K24 engine are pretty much the same. Same symptoms if that screen gets clogged and/or if a defect happens in that unit.
    That V-TEC Solenoid should be considered a consumable part for all Hondas/Acuras made in the 00s.

    • @jacquesc3166
      @jacquesc3166 Год назад

      Hey, same for the 09-15 Infiniti 3.7 VVEL solenoids. Mine was done at around 80K miles IIRC.

  • @Hash9377
    @Hash9377 Год назад

    Intro was hilarious lol

  • @maxr2469
    @maxr2469 Год назад

    Looking forward to see the footage of the Citroën !
    I hope it will be a specially weird one, such as a 2CV or a DS 🤩

  • @ThrawnFett123
    @ThrawnFett123 Год назад +4

    Could you not pull the wire out from behind the tensioner at all? Back out the solenoid and retighten after? Wouldn't save it by any means, but buy time perhaps? We all know how temporary becomes permanent, and I'm no expert on that vehicle by any means, but seems like the sort of thing "we can try this, may buy more time, may not, it'll be a cheap and dirty attempt" would cover for a half hour labor

  • @joshb3623
    @joshb3623 Год назад +1

    Love these j series motors Honda has they got hella potential. Had the 3.2 in my TL with the 6 speed and man that was my 2nd favorite car I've owned,regret not keeping it🤦‍♂️

    • @CRAPO2011
      @CRAPO2011 Год назад

      Seen an odyssey on a forum with a 6mt swap could be fun with a nice lil comptech s/c

  • @Bratfalken
    @Bratfalken Год назад

    Turtle has kits for making the headlights shine again, it really makes a difference at least for a year or two!

  • @ganeshnarayan5505
    @ganeshnarayan5505 Год назад

    Hey Yo Great video thanks for sharing.

  • @jafopt
    @jafopt Год назад

    Great video wizard.

  • @BenKlassen1
    @BenKlassen1 Год назад

    Good find.

  • @breez2max
    @breez2max Год назад +1

    We love your analysis and inspections, however we your fans want to see that car that's is up on the lift the Malibu with a Jag engine put in it running !

  • @IslandMediaStudio
    @IslandMediaStudio Год назад

    Had a low oil warning light on my 2004 Honda Pilot. Replaced the battery and solved the problem

  • @jhoag2577
    @jhoag2577 Год назад

    Acid tone from lowes and paper towel swipe once will clean the head laps. Cost 8 dollars. Last one year.

  • @JSFGuy
    @JSFGuy Год назад +3

    Even on Sunday.

  • @steveauston6020
    @steveauston6020 Год назад +1

    Could try and pull the wire back, take the stress off of it. The sensor may function for awhile

  • @markdorland2870
    @markdorland2870 Год назад +2

    Hi Wizard! Love your channel!! Hit them head lights with some toothpaste for the customer and make it a free because we like you service :)

  • @jake321able
    @jake321able Год назад

    2007 Civic...4 years ago cleaned up headlights and still as good today. Simply went to local chain, selling auto parts, etc. Asked for guidance, was recommended the 'expensive' cleaning kit (~$35)...followed the instructions and about 1 1/2 hours to complete. All these alternatives to cleaning the headlights...why? I think common sense is to talk to local auto stores, buy what they recommend & done. One potential key may be that my vehicles are always in garage when not in use...unless traveling, which I do 2-4 months a year...then not garaged. And yes, I am one of those that sees vehicles as point A to B...nothing more. I maintain them well, cost is not an issue for me, reliability is...just my experience.